VOLUME I: THE EVOLVING PROJECT OF ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY Part 1: Introduction 1. R. L. Martin and P. J. Sunley, ‘The Renaissance of Economic Geography’ (new Introduction for this collection). 2. A. J. Scott (1999) ‘Economic Geography: The Great Half Century’, Cambridge Journal of Economics, 24, pp. 483–504. Part 2: The Shifting Terrain of Method and Explanation 3. A. Sayer (1982) ‘Explanation in Economic Geography: Abstraction versus Generalization’, Progress in Human Geography, 6, pp. 68–88. 4. G. L. Clark (1998) ‘Close Dialogue and Stylized Facts: Methodology in Economic Geography’, Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 88, pp. 73–87. 5. A. Markusen (1999) ‘Fuzzy Concepts, Scanty Evidence and Policy Distance: The Case for Rigour and Policy Relevance in Critical Regional Studies’, Regional Studies, 33, pp 869–86. 6. T. J. Barnes (2000) ‘Retheorizing Economic Geography: From the Quantitative Revolution to the "Cultural Turn"‘, Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 91, pp. 546–65. 7. H. W.-C. Yeung (2003) ‘Practising New Economic Geographies: A Methodological Examination’, Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 93, pp. 445–66. Part 3: Economics and Economic Geography 8. P. Krugman (1998) ‘What’s New about the New Economic Geography?’, Oxford Review of Economic Policy, 14, 2, pp. 7–17. 9. G. Dymski (1998) ‘On Paul Krugman’s Model of Economic Geography’, Geoforum, 27, pp. 439–52. 10. R. L. Martin (1999) ‘The New "Geographical Turn" in Economics: Some Critical Reflections’, Cambridge Journal of Economics, 23, pp. 65–91. 11. O. Sjöberg and F. Sjöholm (2002) ‘Common Ground? Prospects for Integrating the Economic Geography of Geographers and Economists’, Environment and Planning, A, 34, pp. 467–86. 12. R. A. Boschma and J. G. Lambooy (1999), ‘Evolutionary Economics and Economic Geography’, Journal of Evolutionary Economics, 9, 4, pp. 411–29. Part 4: Contextual and Relational Economic Geography 13. N. J. Thrift and K. Olds (1996) ‘Refiguring The Economic in Economic Geography’, Progress in Human Geography, 20, pp. 311–37. 14. P. J. Sunley (1996) ‘Context In Economic Geography: The Relevance of Pragmatism’, Progress in Human Geography, 20, pp. 338–55. 15. J. Allen (1997) ‘Economics of Power and Space’, in R. Lee and J. Wills (eds.), Geographies of Economies (London: Arnold), pp. 59–70. 16. R. L. Martin (2001) ‘Institutionalist Approaches to Economic Geography’, in T. Barnes and E. Sheppard (eds.), A Companion to Economic Geography (Oxford: Blackwell), pp. 77–94. 17. H. Bathelt and J. Glückler (2003) ‘Toward a Relational Economic Geography’, Journal of Economic Geography, 3, 2, pp. 117–44. VOLUME II: SPACES OF WEALTH CREATION IN A GLOBALIZING ECONOMY Part 5: Introduction 18. R. L. Martin and P. J. Sunley, ‘The Resurgence of Regions in a Globalizing Economy’ (new Introduction for this collection). 19. A. J. Scott and M. Storper (2003) ‘Regions, Globalization, Development’, Regional Studies (37): 579–93. Part 6: Rethinking Uneven Regional Development in A Globalizing World 20. N. Smith (1984) ‘Toward a Theory of Uneven Development: Spatial Scale and the See-Saw of Capital’, Uneven Development: Nature, Capital and the Production of Space (Oxford: Blackwell), pp. 131–54. 21. D. Harvey (1985) ‘The Geopolitics of Capitalism’, in D. Gregory and J. Urry (eds.), Social Relations and Spatial Structures (London: Macmillan), pp. 128–63. 22. M. Storper (1995) ‘The Resurgence of Regional Economies Ten Years On: The Region as a Nexus of Untraded Interdependencies’, European Urban and Regional Studies, 2, pp. 191–221. 23. M. Dunford (2003) ‘Theorizing Regional Economic Performance and the Changing Territorial Division of Labour’, Regional Studies, 37, pp. 839–54. 24. M. Storper (1997) ‘Territories, Flows and Hierarchies in the Global Economy’, in K. R. Cox (ed.), Spaces of Globalization: Reasserting the Power of the Local (New York: Guilford), pp. 19–44. 25. P. Dicken, P. Kelly, C. Olds, and H. W.-C. Yeung (2001) ‘Chains and Networks, Territories and Scales: Towards a Relational Framework for Analysing the Global Economy’, Global Networks, 1, 2, pp. 80–112. Part 7: New Spaces of Flexible Accumulation 26. D. Harvey (1989) ‘Theorizing the Transition … Flexible Accumulation: Solid Transformation or Temporary Fix?’, The Condition of Postmodernity (Oxford: Blackwell), pp. 173–97. 27. B. Asheim (1992) ‘Flexible Specialisation, Industrial Districts and Small Firms: A Critical Appraisal’, in H. Ernste and V. Meier (eds.), Regional Development and Contemporary Industrial Response: Extending Flexible Specialisation (London: Belhaven Press), pp. 45–63. 28. M. Gertler (1992) ‘Flexibility Revisited; Districts, Nation-States and the Forces of Production’, Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, ns, 17, pp. 259–78. 29. K. Cox (1996) ‘Period and Place, Capitalist Development and the Flexible Specialisation Debate’, in D. Knudsen (ed.), The Transition to Flexibility (London: Kluwer Academic Publishers), pp. 155–77. Part 8: The (Re)localization of Economic Activity: Districts and Clusters 30. B. Harrison (1992) ‘Industrial Districts: Old Wine in New Bottles?’, Regional Studies, 26, pp. 469–83. 31. A. Amin and N. J. Thrift (1992) ‘Neo-Marshallian Nodes in Global Networks’, International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 16, pp. 571–87. 32. A. Markusen (1996) ‘Sticky Places in Slippery Space: A Typology of Industrial Districts’, Economic Geography, 72, pp. 293–313. 33. M. E. Porter (2000) ‘Location, Competition and Economic Development: Local Clusters in the Global Economy’, Economic Development Quarterly, 14, pp. 15–31. 34. R. L. Martin and P. Sunley (2003) ‘Deconstructing Clusters: Chaotic Concept or Policy Panacea?’, Journal of Economic Geography, 3, pp. 5–35. Part 9: Knowledge and Innovative Places 35. K. Morgan (1997) ‘The Learning Region: Institutions, Innovation and Regional Renewal’, Regional Studies, 31, pp. 491–503. 36. J. Howells (2002) ‘Tacit Knowledge, Innovation and Economic Geography’, Urban Studies, 39, pp. 871–84. 37. P. Cooke (2001) ‘Regional Innovation Systems, Clusters, and the Knowledge Economy’, Industrial and Corporate Change, 10, pp. 945–74. 38. R. Florida (2002) ‘The Creative Economy’, Rise of the Creative Class (New York: Basic Books), pp. 44–66. VOLUME III: FIRMS AND LABOUR MARKETS Part 10: Introduction 39. R. L. Martin and P. J. Sunley, ‘The Changing Landscape of Workplaces and Work’ (new Introduction for this collection). 40. J. Allen (1988) ‘Fragmented Firms, Disorganised Workers’, in J. Allen and D. Massey (eds.), The Economy in Question (London: Sage), pp. 184–227. Part 11: The Firm and Economic Geography 41. P. Maskell (2001) ‘The Firm in Economic Geography’, Economic Geography, 77, pp. 329–44. 42. G. L.Clark and N. Wrigley (1995) ‘Sunk Costs: A Framework for Economic Geography’, Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 20, pp. 204–23. 43. P. Oinas (1997) ‘On the Socio-Spatial Embeddedness of Business Firms’, Erdkunde, 51, pp. 23–32. 44. P. McCann and R. Mudambi (2005) ‘Analytical Differences in the Economics of Geography: The Case of the Multinational Firm’, Environment and Planning, A, 37, 1857–76. 45. J. Pollard (2003) ‘Small Firm Finance and Economic Geography’, Journal of Economic Geography, 4, pp. 429–52. Part 12: Shifting Perspectives on the Geographies of Labour 46. M. Storper and R. Walker (1983) ‘The Theory of Labour and the Theory of Location’, International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 7, pp. 1–41. 47. J. Peck (1989) ‘Reconceptualising the Local Labour Market: Space, Segmentation and the State’, Progress in Human Geography, 13, pp. 42–61. 48. S. Hanson and G. Pratt (1992) ‘Dynamic Interdependencies: A Geographic Investigation of Local Labour Markets’, Economic Geography, 68, pp. 373–405. 49. A. Herod (1997) ‘From a Geography of Labour to a Labour Geography: Labour’s Spatial Fix and the Geography of Capitalism’, Antipode, 29, pp. 1–31. 50. R. L. Martin (2001) ‘Local Labour